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Teofimo Lopez Jr. dominates Steve Claggett to retain WBO/Ring junior welterweight titles

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by Joseph Santoliquito |

MIAMI, Fla. — The little engine in his head slowed down. Plus, Teofimo Lopez Jr. a few years ago he gave up trying to control his anxiety. It is more reflective. He is more relaxed. He learned to tame the dim fear that gathered outside and grew with each fight.

That couldn’t have been more evident than this week as he prepared to defend his WBO/Ring Magazine junior welterweight world title against Canadian Steve Claggett on Saturday night at the James L. Knight Center in Miami, Florida.

It took some time, but Lopez Jr. likes his bounce. His easygoing demeanor has translated to the ring.

One of boxing’s most extravagant showmen put on a show, starting with a walk around the ring and ending with a Michael Jackson dance, wearing a white jacket with gold trim.

Lopez (21-1, 13 knockouts) finished the fight via unanimous decision, winning 120-108 on the scorecards of judges Lisa Giampa and Efrain Lebron and 119-109 on the scorecards of judge Steve Weisfeld.

“I’m definitely thinking about getting promoted. My legs, my body need to move to 147. I want Terence Crawford. This is the goal. I don’t know, I don’t care who belts 147 pounds. I just want a guy with The Ring belt, and that’s Terence “Bud” Crawford.”

Lopez landed a career-high 315 punches, averaging a career-best 26 punches per round, and landed 946 punches total, a career-best 79 punches per round.

“I’m really relaxed, I like where I am, I’m getting older, my son is getting older and I have to show what it means to be a good man,” Lopez said. “Maybe it was as simple as it sounds. Claggett is a tough guy. I have a lot of respect for him. But at the end they told him he fought, and I got tired.

“I was actually there. We had a game plan and we stuck to it. The guy was tough. I was aiming for a tough competitor. I knew this guy would want to test my abilities. He touched me for the sake of touching me. I wasn’t afraid of him. If there is anything you must include, a quote from Muhammad Ali, the will must be stronger than the ability.

“I’m definitely thinking about promotion. My legs, my body needs to move, I’ll go to 147. I want Terence Crawford. That’s the goal. I don’t know, I don’t care who has the 147-pound belts. I just want a guy with The Ring belt, and that’s Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford.”

From the start, Claggett (38-8-2, 26 KOs) kept the pressure on Lopez. He kept coming forward, throwing punches. He might not have much control over them, but the punches were constant. Lopez absorbed as much as he could with his shoulders and arms. The clumsy and stick-thin Claggett kept burrowing forward.

The question is whether he will be able to maintain that pace for 12 rounds.

In the second round, Claggett tried the same tactic, trying to choke Lopez. It seemed like he was hitting Lopez with a million pebbles — not just one. Lopez was falling back, luring Claggett forward. Lopez landed most of his shots in the second round, although Claggett’s efficiency seemed to decline slightly.

In the third round, Lopez hit Claggett with a left hook early in the round, then caught Claggett with a straight right moments later. Lopez’s punches came with a thud that could be heard at ringside.

Lopez appeared to wake up in the third round, which was his best round at the time.

Lopez punishes brave Steve Claggett with a right (Photo: Mikey Williams/Top Rank)

Lopez hit Claggett, who was looking down, with a left and then a right uppercut, knocking the Canadian’s head back.

In the fifth round, Claggett’s performance dropped significantly compared to the first four rounds. He continued to stalk Lopez, but didn’t punch his way through. Claggett seemed content to just touch Lopez at times, and his punches didn’t do much.

Using his left arm as a battering ram, Lopez ran straight into Claggett to start the seventh round. At this point, Claggett was throwing punches in succession, and Lopez was landing them with ease. He began to land punches on Claggett, and the tough Canadian could do little to stop him.

Claggett was brave. He kept moving forward, catching Lopez more than willing to sit on punches and engage. Lopez attacked Claggett with two rights to the jaw and then a right hook. Lopez made Claggett pay whenever he got close, especially with a steady diet of hooks.

In the ninth, Lopez continued his attack. He worked well on the levels, lashing Claggett’s flanks with right roundhouses and forcing his will behind the left shoulder.

Claggett performed purely out of courage.

But he was obviously getting a beating.

In the top ten it’s more or less the same. Lopez hits Claggett with uppercuts and Claggett takes them. Lopez ended the round with a violent attack that Claggett was unable to respond to.

In the final round, Claggett tried to come forward, though this time he was met by a hail of shots from Lopez. He was then peppered with shots to the body, then the left shoulder, then the right upper body.

Lopez finished the performance with a torrent of shots. When the final bell rang, both fighters embraced.

“I saw combinations from my son that I had never seen before,” said Teofimo Lopez Sr., Lopez Jr.’s father and trainer. “We knew we had to hit the body, and he kept coming. Claggett did an incredible job. He kept landing punches, but the frequency dropped because he had never dealt with anyone like my son.

“We are thinking about moving up to 147 pounds. We are still sturdy at 140, we made weight easily and he was sturdy at the end of the fight. But we want Terence Crawford. Facing Crawford will be a tough fight for him and I admit it will be a tough fight for us. I saw combinations today, but I never saw my throw. Crawford is a hazardous fight for him and for us.

“My son will be even stronger at 147. But we can stay at 140. If the fights are good, we can stay at 140. If we go to 147, we want to fight for titles, and these guys at 147 want to fight us. We got nothing from tonight. We expected to win, and we did.”

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Boxing

William Zepeda vs. Giovanni Cabrera July 6, live on DAZN

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William Zepeda vs. Giovanni Cabrera on July 6th, live on DAZN

William Zepeda will return to action against Giovanni Cabrera (22-1, 7 KOs) in a 12-round lightweight main event this Saturday, July 6, live on DAZN from inside the Toyota Arena in Ontario, California. The event is scheduled to begin at 8:00 PM ET.

(Photo credit: Golden Boy / Cris Esqueda)

Ranked number one by the four lightweight sanctioning organizations, Golden Boy-promoted William Zepeda (30-0, 26 KOs) fought Cabrera (22-1, 7 KOs).

This isn’t the fight Zepeda’s promoters wanted, as they were hoping for a title shot against WBC 135-pound champion Shakur Stevenson, but that’s not happening. Cabrera, 29, is the best Zepeda has to offer, so he’ll have to be elated for now.

Zepeda vs. Cabrera Event Information

Start time: 8:00 PM ET on DAZN
Location: Toyota Arena, Ontario, California

Zepeda, 28, has been in incredible form recently, beating these four players:

-Maxi Hughes: RTD 4
– Mercito Gesta: TKO 6
-Jaime Arboleda: KO 2
-Joseph “JoJo” Diaz: UD 12

Zepeda is a bad style for Cabrera because he doesn’t have much power and mostly boxes, looking for decisions. He’s like a taller, less graceful version of Maxi Hughes.

Born in Seattle, Washington, Cabrera is a tidy boxer with excellent skills. He has been defeated only once in his career, a 12-round split decision over Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz last July.

Cabrera handled the pressure of Pitbull Cruz well and was on the attack in the championship rounds, outpointing the 5’4” Mexican star. He could have won this fight if he had started attacking Cruz earlier, as he was the better fighter in the final moments.

Of all the 135-pound fighters, Zepeda has the best fighting style to defeat WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson.

Given the pressure and high tempo of Zepeda’s offensive game, this would be a really bad style for Shakur and he would have to move more than in any other fight he’s had.

Unfortunately, he won’t be able to beat Zepeda this way unless the case turns out to be controversial, and that can’t be ruled out.

Event details

  • Date: Saturday, July 6
  • Start time: 7pm PDT (3am Sunday UK time)
  • Streaming: DAZN
  • Location: Toyota Arena, Ontario, California.

Updated fight card:

  • Main Event: William Zepeda vs. Giovanni Cabrera – 12 Rounds, Lightweight
  • Co-Main Event: Ricardo Sandoval vs. Angel Acosta – 10 Rounds, Flyweight
  • Preliminary Card: Manuel Flores vs. Nohel Arambulet – 10 Rounds, Super Bantamweight
  • Preliminary Card: Joel Iriarte vs. Yainel Alvarez – 6 Rounds, Welterweight
  • Elimination Fight of the Night: Alex Martin vs. Pedro Campa – 10 Rounds, Super Lightweight
  • Eliminations: Gael Cabrera vs. Mychaquell Shields – 4 rounds, bantamweight
  • Eliminations: Joshua Garcia vs. Jason Buenaobra – 6 rounds, super featherweight
  • Eliminations: Anthony Saldivar vs. Roman Canto – 4 Rounds, Super Welterweight
  • Eliminations: Daniel Luna vs. Joseph Walker – 4 Rounds, Lightweight
  • Eliminations: Japhethlee Llamido vs. Ryan Allen – 8 rounds, super bantamweight

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Ryan Garcia ‘didn’t cheat,’ says UFC boss Dana White

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Ryan Garcia workout

LAS VEGAS — Dana White has come to the defense of Ryan Garcia, who was recently suspended for a year by the Modern York Athletic Commission after he tested positive for a banned substance.

“From what my team tells me, and these guys are the damn best, [it was a] “Contaminated supplement,” UFC boss said.

Garcia put on the performance of a lifetime when he knocked down Devin Haney three times en route to a decision victory on April 20 at the Barclays Center in Modern York City, but that was later ruled null and void when drug testers detected Ostarine in the 25-year-old boxer’s urine.

His legal team issued a statement to WBN on May 31 stating, “The results of the tests on samples of two supplements declared by Ryan Garcia on VADA doping control forms signed on April 19 and 20 came back positive for ostarine contamination.”

They added that “confidential test reports” indicate the banned substance came from two NutraBIO-brand supplements.

NutraBIO has vehemently denied this, issuing a statement indicating that “no ostarine has been found in its products” after conducting its own testing.

CEO and founder Mark Glazier called Garcia’s claims “irresponsible,” adding, “Any express or implied statements suggesting that our product contained ostarine at the time of sale are completely without merit.”

A number of UFC fighters have tested positive for Ostarine in recent years, including UFC bantamweight champion and non-weight ranking star Sean O’Malley, who has an online rivalry with Garcia.

Following Saturday’s UFC 303 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, White spoke with World Boxing News and other reporters about Ostarine, Garcia and his ban from boxing.

“None of this is my business — it’s not my record,” he began. “I hate to talk about drug testing, but with all my knowledge… in the years [UFC has] “he was drug tested, we believe the people doing the drug testing were taking contaminated supplements and were not cheating.”

White said that if Garcia “had the right people around him,” none of this would have happened.

He reiterated that as the president of a leading MMA organization, he has “no skin” in the boxing business. “I don’t care; it’s not my fight, it’s not my business.”

However, he added that the UFC is “pretty sure it was a tainted supplement.”

While Garcia’s ban expires in April 2025, that does not in any way diminish his status as one of boxing’s biggest stars.

As reported last month, Garcia could face at least two more world title shots after serving his suspension.

Premier Boxing Champions consultant Stephen Espinoza has welcomed the fight between PBC star Gervonta Davis and Golden Boy Promotions boxer Garcia, calling it a “huge, huge rematch” in an exclusive interview with World Boxing News.

Boxing coach Bob Santos, on the other hand, in an interview with us in which he discussed the mega fight between Manny Pacquiao and Barrios in behind schedule 2024, apparently would like to see his fighter Mario Barrios fight Garcia next year.

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Boxing

Shakur Stevenson has something to prove

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By: Sean Crose

Gervonta Davis. Vasyl Lomachenko. Devin Haney. Teofimo Lopez. All of these men are in the overall weight class of WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson. With a 21-fight record and zero losses, the 27-year-old Stevenson would be a familiar face for any of the aforementioned names. Stevenson is more than just an undefeated champion. He is considered one of the most talented fighters in the world. Highly talented and at times fascinating, the Newark, Up-to-date Jersey product is good—very good—maybe too good for his own good.

Stevenson, after all, has been accused of being a tedious fighter. While he’s no knockout artist, his last fight—a tedious twelve-rounder with Edwin De Los Santos last November—really raised eyebrows. While there was no doubt that Stevenson had expertly outplayed De Los Santos that night, the question of why Stevenson didn’t step up and keep De Los Santos at bay, or at least look genuinely engaged, began to swirl. Stevenson himself admitted that he wasn’t cheerful with his performance. Boxing, being at least as much a business as it is a sport, doesn’t smile on fighters who fail to generate any kind of excitement either in or out of the ring. Stevenson, more than anyone else, knows that he has to at least entertain in order to gain the fame and challenge he craves.

One way Stevenson can generate buzz that will attract attention and praise is if the promoted fighter makes an impression this weekend when he faces Artem Harutyunyan on Saturday night in his hometown of Newark, N.J. The German Harutyunyan has a record of 12-1, having only lost in his last fight when he was discredited by Frank Martin. In other words, Harutyunyan is no can of tomatoes. The 33-year-old has good punch timing and power, although his record of just seven knockouts doesn’t suggest much.

Of course, a loss to Harutyunyan would be devastating for Stevenson at this point in his career. However, an impressive win would make the multi-division champion that much harder for other top fighters to avoid. It’s time for this man to find his way into a large fight. Considering both Lopez and Lomachenko are fighting under the Top Rank banner, this large fight may actually be more evenly matched than it seems.

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